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Lois “Mamee” <I>Bonds</I> Shipp

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Lois “Mamee” Bonds Shipp

Birth
Holly Springs, Marshall County, Mississippi, USA
Death
9 Jan 2019 (aged 92)
Holly Springs, Marshall County, Mississippi, USA
Burial
Holly Springs, Marshall County, Mississippi, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Sarah Lois Bonds was the daughter of Bertha Burris and Conway Warren Bonds.
Lois was born and raised in "Colonsay Cottage" on College Avenue in Holly Springs. She had an older brother James, sisters Christine and Connie. As a child she jumped and played gleefully on cotton bales that were stacked in the local cotton gin and sometimes hitched a ride on the back of a horse drawn ice wagon and she of many other childhood exploits that set the course for her adventurist spirit.
Lois attended Holly Springs High School and then went on to attend Baylor University in Waco, Texas where she met and married Frederick Earl Swaney on October 15, 1945. They moved back to Holly Springs where they then raised their six children Jorja Lee (1946), Scott Conway (1948), Walker James (1949), Farrah Lois (1955), Randell Phelps (1957), and Melody Ann Swaney (1959) at Grey Gables and where there was never a dull moment. She was an accomplished painstaking and her renditions of Scott Joplin's "Ragtime," church hymns or even Mozart could be heard throughout their home. Their home was filled with love and countless other children and friends, a dog named Hildegard and where their welcoming door was always open for others and a warm meal could be had for all.
Lois was a devoted Christian and a lifelong member of the First Baptist Church of Holly Springs where she was a longtime Sunday School teacher for more than fifty-eight years. She was one of the first kindergarten teachers in Holly Springs at the First Baptist Church when Holly Springs didn't have a regulat Kindergarten. She wrote a column for several years in the Memphis Commercial Appeal and even wrote a "secret" column in the nineteen fifties for the South Reporter under the pseudonym "Holly Belle" telling things that were going on in the surrounding area and she was the only one that knew. In her lifetime she lived in six antebellum homes two of which she saved from raising, and restored them to their orginial condition and opened them for tours.
She wrote six books on Marshall County and Holly Springs history. She also wrote "History of the First Baptist Church" and even participated in three Hollywood movies, "Heart of Dixie" in which she had a speaking part, "Cookies Fortune" and "Big Bad Love." She even created the Holly Springs Christmas Tour which hundreds attend each December. One year she was honored as the Grand Marshal of the Christmas Parade and even honored as "Woman of the Year of Marshall County" by the citizens of Marshall County. The State of Mississippi also honored her as "Mississippi's Outstanding Older Workers" in 2003 through the Experience Works Prime Time Awards Program. She was recognized as a positive role model for older citizens whose amazing accomplishments inspire us to give our best to our employees, communities and our nation. They looked for individuals who best reflect the characteristics of leadership, lifelong learnings, mentoring and community services and who make meaningful contributions in the workplace. She was honored by The Mississippi Historical Society. Lois was the individual who brought her experience, gained over a lifetime, to her employment along with exemplary characteristics including reliability, dedication and positive work ethic in her community, church, and life. She also helped to establish the Ida B. Wells Museum, and also was the host of a local radio show and host of the television program "Holly Belles" that went out to four county wide area to promote Holly Springs and Marshall County.
Lois had been the president of the Marshall County Historical Society and was the Curator of the Marshall County Historical Museum since 1987, which is one of the most unique museums in the world. Throughout her life she tried to save precious artifacts and buildings. She worked full time until she was eighty-one years old. She was lifelong political activist and one of the highlights of her life was personally meeting President George Bush. She was a lifelong member of The Daughters of. The American Revolution and was regent many times and she was also a member of the Rotary Club.
At the age of eighty she married Ira Ervin Shipp where, as octogenarians, they were regular staples of local community life, events, and local gatherings.
No one would ever call Lois Bonds Swaney-Shipp ordinary. She was extraordinary and she lived an extraordinary and full life. She never missed an opportunity to "GO." She overcame many obstacles such as cancer, three major surgeries, a broken leg, two mini stokes, and a major stroke which led to retirement. She was the self-appointed Ambassador of Holly Springs and Marshall County, Mississippi.
Lois Bonds Swaney-Shipp was such a remarkable individual. Besides being a successful career woman, historian, and Christian leader, she was a loving and remarkable mother to six children, grandmother to eighteen grandchildren, and great-grandmother to twenty-seven great-grandchildren. Her family was everything to her and she was everything to them. Each and everyone felt like they were her "favorite." A matriarch who will be sorely missed, and remembered with great love by all who knew her. Even though she had tiny little feet her shoes will be impossible to fill.
Sarah Lois Bonds was the daughter of Bertha Burris and Conway Warren Bonds.
Lois was born and raised in "Colonsay Cottage" on College Avenue in Holly Springs. She had an older brother James, sisters Christine and Connie. As a child she jumped and played gleefully on cotton bales that were stacked in the local cotton gin and sometimes hitched a ride on the back of a horse drawn ice wagon and she of many other childhood exploits that set the course for her adventurist spirit.
Lois attended Holly Springs High School and then went on to attend Baylor University in Waco, Texas where she met and married Frederick Earl Swaney on October 15, 1945. They moved back to Holly Springs where they then raised their six children Jorja Lee (1946), Scott Conway (1948), Walker James (1949), Farrah Lois (1955), Randell Phelps (1957), and Melody Ann Swaney (1959) at Grey Gables and where there was never a dull moment. She was an accomplished painstaking and her renditions of Scott Joplin's "Ragtime," church hymns or even Mozart could be heard throughout their home. Their home was filled with love and countless other children and friends, a dog named Hildegard and where their welcoming door was always open for others and a warm meal could be had for all.
Lois was a devoted Christian and a lifelong member of the First Baptist Church of Holly Springs where she was a longtime Sunday School teacher for more than fifty-eight years. She was one of the first kindergarten teachers in Holly Springs at the First Baptist Church when Holly Springs didn't have a regulat Kindergarten. She wrote a column for several years in the Memphis Commercial Appeal and even wrote a "secret" column in the nineteen fifties for the South Reporter under the pseudonym "Holly Belle" telling things that were going on in the surrounding area and she was the only one that knew. In her lifetime she lived in six antebellum homes two of which she saved from raising, and restored them to their orginial condition and opened them for tours.
She wrote six books on Marshall County and Holly Springs history. She also wrote "History of the First Baptist Church" and even participated in three Hollywood movies, "Heart of Dixie" in which she had a speaking part, "Cookies Fortune" and "Big Bad Love." She even created the Holly Springs Christmas Tour which hundreds attend each December. One year she was honored as the Grand Marshal of the Christmas Parade and even honored as "Woman of the Year of Marshall County" by the citizens of Marshall County. The State of Mississippi also honored her as "Mississippi's Outstanding Older Workers" in 2003 through the Experience Works Prime Time Awards Program. She was recognized as a positive role model for older citizens whose amazing accomplishments inspire us to give our best to our employees, communities and our nation. They looked for individuals who best reflect the characteristics of leadership, lifelong learnings, mentoring and community services and who make meaningful contributions in the workplace. She was honored by The Mississippi Historical Society. Lois was the individual who brought her experience, gained over a lifetime, to her employment along with exemplary characteristics including reliability, dedication and positive work ethic in her community, church, and life. She also helped to establish the Ida B. Wells Museum, and also was the host of a local radio show and host of the television program "Holly Belles" that went out to four county wide area to promote Holly Springs and Marshall County.
Lois had been the president of the Marshall County Historical Society and was the Curator of the Marshall County Historical Museum since 1987, which is one of the most unique museums in the world. Throughout her life she tried to save precious artifacts and buildings. She worked full time until she was eighty-one years old. She was lifelong political activist and one of the highlights of her life was personally meeting President George Bush. She was a lifelong member of The Daughters of. The American Revolution and was regent many times and she was also a member of the Rotary Club.
At the age of eighty she married Ira Ervin Shipp where, as octogenarians, they were regular staples of local community life, events, and local gatherings.
No one would ever call Lois Bonds Swaney-Shipp ordinary. She was extraordinary and she lived an extraordinary and full life. She never missed an opportunity to "GO." She overcame many obstacles such as cancer, three major surgeries, a broken leg, two mini stokes, and a major stroke which led to retirement. She was the self-appointed Ambassador of Holly Springs and Marshall County, Mississippi.
Lois Bonds Swaney-Shipp was such a remarkable individual. Besides being a successful career woman, historian, and Christian leader, she was a loving and remarkable mother to six children, grandmother to eighteen grandchildren, and great-grandmother to twenty-seven great-grandchildren. Her family was everything to her and she was everything to them. Each and everyone felt like they were her "favorite." A matriarch who will be sorely missed, and remembered with great love by all who knew her. Even though she had tiny little feet her shoes will be impossible to fill.


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  • Maintained by: John T. Rice
  • Originally Created by: Anonymous
  • Added: Feb 24, 2015
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/143011852/lois-shipp: accessed ), memorial page for Lois “Mamee” Bonds Shipp (23 Feb 1926–9 Jan 2019), Find a Grave Memorial ID 143011852, citing Hill Crest Cemetery, Holly Springs, Marshall County, Mississippi, USA; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by John T. Rice (contributor 48252994).